Outlaw sparks Blazers over Rockets 96-87

Oden scored just two points, a tip with 58 seconds left, but had
12 rebounds and five blocked shots for the Portland Trail
Blazers in a 96-87 season-opening victory over the Houston
Rockets on Tuesday night.

"You definitely want a lot more points," Oden said. "But I think
I did a lot of good things that don't show up on the scoreboard
or in the stats."

Aaron Brooks had 19 points for the Rockets, who defeated
Portland in six games this past spring in the first round of the
playoffs.

That was a much different Houston team, though. Rockets center
Yao Ming is out for the season after offseason foot surgery, and
Ron Artest - who pestered the Blazers - left for the Lakers as a
free agent.

Houston also remains without former All-Star Tracy McGrady, who
had microfracture surgery on his left knee and isn't expected to
return until midseason.

The absence of Yao presented matchup problems for the Rockets in
trying to defend the 7-foot Oden. Houston started 6-foot-6 Chuck
Hayes at center.

Oden, who was the No. 1 draft pick in 2007 but missed his rookie
season because of microfracture surgery on his knee, played off
the bench for most of last season but wrested the starting job
away from Joel Przybilla this fall.

The emphasis for Oden - and the rest of the Blazers - was
defense, according to the directive from coach Nate McMillan.
Even though Oden had five fouls late in the game, he kept
reaching for blocks.

"That's the commitment, getting involved in the game on the
defensive end of the floor, not the offensive end of the floor.
Offensive players want to see that ball go in the basket before
they get into the game," McMillan said. "We want to change that
thought process this year and get into the game on the defensive
end of the floor. I thought our guys did that."

But there were problems. The Blazers had 26 turnovers and they
let the Rockets pull within six points at the end.

"We had a pretty good combination out there that attacked them a
little bit," Houston coach Rick Adelman said. "But they really
helped us by turning it over like they did."

The Blazers were without Nicolas Batum, who was set to be a
starting forward until Monday, when it was announced that he
would need shoulder surgery and would miss at least three
months.

In his place the Blazers started Martell Webster, who missed all
but a few minutes of last season because of a foot injury.
Webster finished with 14 points.

The Blazers pulled ahead in the first quarter until Trevor
Ariza's 3-pointer tied it at 20 for Houston. Ariza signed with
the Rockets as a free agent in the offseason after spending last
season in Los Angeles.

But Outlaw hit on a dunk, a 3-pointer and another dunk to put
Portland ahead 30-23 and kick off a 23-7 run that made it 46-30.
The Blazers went on to lead 54-41 at the break. Outlaw had 14
points in the first half.

Blazers swingman Rudy Fernandez, who missed much of the
preseason because of back spasms, hit a 3-pointer to make it
67-48.

The Rockets narrowed it to 89-83 late in the game after Chase
Budinger's dunk and a pair of free throws from fellow rookie
David Anderson, but couldn't pull any closer.

"We built the lead, but the biggest thing is we didn't put them
away when we had a chance to," Roy said. "Then again, it's the
first game and we're just happy to have this win even though it
was sloppy. It's one under our belts."

The Rockets defeated the Blazers 4-2 in the playoffs, claiming
their first postseason series victory since 1997. Houston lost
in the conference semifinals to the eventual NBA champion
Lakers.

Portland had not been to the playoffs since 2003.

Notes: Portland's 26 turnovers were more than they had in any
game last season. "This will probably be the last game we win
with 26 turnovers," McMillan said. ... Przybilla fouled out with
7:03 left. ... Houston's Brooks played at the University of
Oregon. ... The Rockets have a rough start to the season. They
play the second of a back-to-back at Golden State on Wednesday,
then face the Blazers again for their home opener on Halloween
before visiting Utah and finally hosting the defending champion
Lakers on Nov. 4. "After five games we're going to figure out
who we are," Adelman said.